California Assembly approves Farm Workers' Day by urgency vote after heated debate

California State Assembly · March 23, 2026

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Summary

The Assembly passed AB 2,156 to designate March 31 as Farm Workers' Day with an urgency clause, 67–0, after lawmakers debated honoring farmworkers while addressing recent allegations linked to Cesar Chavez.

The California State Assembly on the floor Wednesday approved Assembly Bill 2,156, designating March 31 as Farm Workers' Day and taking effect immediately, after a contentious debate over symbolism and process.

Majority Leader Agar Curry, presenting the bill on behalf of Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas, framed the measure as recognition of the labor and sacrifice of farmworkers and as solidarity with survivors of abuse. “For the survivors, we believe you,” the Majority Leader said, urging colleagues to support the urgency measure and the bill.

Opponents and cautious supporters voiced concern about the timing and scope of the change. Assemblymember De Maio warned the chamber against treating the measure as a quick fix to “airbrush” the legacy of Cesar Chavez, arguing the move risked sidelining broader policy work for farmworkers. “If we're going to celebrate farmworkers, perhaps we should also enact some policies to help their lot,” De Maio said.

Other lawmakers spoke from personal experience and family histories in agriculture. Assemblymember Macedo described multi‑generational ties to farm work and urged passage as recognition of that labor. Several members who co‑authored or supported the bill highlighted the need to honor the collective movement rather than a single individual.

The chair announced the bill included an urgency clause requiring a 54‑vote threshold. The Clerk reported the recorded tally as I 67 No 0 on both the urgency clause and the measure itself, after roll call. The measure passed and was ordered transmitted immediately to the Senate.

The Assembly also discussed the broader implications raised in debate: calls to pair symbolic recognition with concrete policy measures for workers’ safety, pay, and protections, and differing views about the best way to respond to allegations connected to a historic figure in the farmworker movement.

The Assembly recessed under call after the vote and moved into a joint convention later in the afternoon for the State of the Judiciary address.

The bill text, amendments, and any committee reports were not read into the record during this sequence; immediate transmittal to the Senate was noted at the conclusion of the vote. The Senate will receive the bill for consideration.